Posted on 08/03/2019 11:17:19 AM PDT by jfd1776
The President referred to Baltimore, MD as "a hellhole," and the nation erupted in anger.
Within hours, snowflakes whined that it was hurtful, offensive, insulting, and unpresidential.
Within days, people started talking about the facts, though, and the President was redeemed. The many statistics on crime, unemployment, poverty, and urban blight prove that, by any objective standard, Baltimore is indeed a hellhole.
The proper political question isnt what to do about a politicians statement; the proper question is what to do about the facts?
BALTIMORE ISN'T UNUSUAL.
We should begin by acknowledging another truth; whatever can be said about Baltimore can also be said about most other big cities in the United States. The differences, for the most part, are just a matter of degree.
I myself was born in a very similar city: Chicago, Illinois (though my parents moved us out to the suburbs as fast as they could).
Like Baltimore, Chicago has wealthy neighborhoods, a beautiful shoreline, great restaurants, quality theatre, museums and art galleries. The same could be said of Cleveland, Milwaukee, Houston, Minneapolis/St. Paul, New York, Los Angeles, Washington, D.C., and so many other cities from coast to coast.
Unfortunately, in addition to these good points, all these cities also have urban blight whole sections of condemned buildings, unlivable neighborhoods, areas unsafe even to visit, let alone to live in. The division between the desirable and undesirable varies, of course; some are half-and-half, some are two-thirds miserable, some are even four-fifths miserable. Baltimore may be one of the worst, in its crime and poverty statistics, but it truly doesnt stand alone.
What are the causes of these problems, what are the solutions? Which politicians are more concerned with listing the problems, and which ones are focused on trying to work toward solutions?
THE GREAT SOCIETY AND THE WELFARE STATE
There once was a time long, long ago when this countrys leadership stuck to the vision of our Founding Fathers: providing a severely limited government for the citizenry, inexpensive to run and inoffensive to commerce. The country saw its job as providing roads so we could get around, a stable currency so we can transact business, a criminal justice system to remove miscreants from our neighborhoods, and a military to defend us in case we were attacked. Such a small, limited government didnt require a ton of taxes to maintain; we didnt even have an income tax until the twentieth century.
But then came the Wilson administration, and then FDR, and LBJ, and Clinton, and Obama. For a century now, our government has grown in size and scope, providing services such as food aid, and housing aid, and education aid, and transportation aid. With the government providing so much to help the poor, the government costs infinitely more to run, and that means skyrocketing taxes, to the point that for many of us, fully half of our income goes to this panoply of taxes. From state and federal income tax, to employee and employer Social Security / Medicare tax, and more. We pay taxes on our fuel, our food, our homes, our cars, our purchases and our sales. Everything is taxed, and it sure adds up.
As a result, government can afford to provide all sorts of benefits, but they are benefits with a hook: Once you start receiving them, its very hard to get off them. The welfare state is amazingly similar to the opiates that were once prescribed as painkillers; they help at first, but then you become addicted, and the very same benefits are transformed from a blessing to a manacle in a matter of weeks.
Do you need housing, a meal, clean clothes, healthcare? Certainly.
But if you have to work to earn them yourself, then you are rewarded for working harder, by a raise in your standard of living. And if you receive them from the government as welfare benefits, then you are punished for working harder, because the benefits are (naturally) removed as you no longer qualify for them. There is a period of time in the early stretch of a career in which going from welfare recipient to honorable worker actually hurts; it causes a drop in ones standard of living. So many simply do not, or think they cannot, make that shift, so people are trapped for generations in the Welfare State. This is especially destructive to cities, because they have such a concentration of welfare program opportunities. Once a city is stuck with a welfare ghetto, that ghettos tendency is to spread, and to displace the more desirable portions of the city. While there is certainly terrible corruption in the city halls of many of these miserable cities, its the Welfare State thats most responsible for their downfall. Even with a squeaky clean city government, Baltimore and Chicago would still be miserable.
These welfare ghettos with their lack of potential employees and their crime therefore drive out the very employers they so desperately need. Stores, factories, distribution centers, and their employees move to the suburbs, or even to other states. As they leave, the businesses that used to serve them dry cleaners, restaurants, grocery stores and other stores follow them to their new locations, leaving the city with empty apartments, empty houses, empty storefronts, empty factories.
And as the taxpaying population flees, the cities must pay for their bloated governments (remember, it was the welfare state that bloated them) by raising taxes on the ever-fewer taxpayers they have left, and by begging their state governments for more aid to the city, which renders their entire states unlivable (cf. Illinois and California).
It is indeed a vicious circle.
PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS
Calling attention to the problem is easy. Cite the statistics on crime and unemployment, on fatherless families and gang violence, and youre sure to get respect from the audience for caring. But it doesnt accomplish anything.
By contrast, the politicians who focus on solving these problems have a harder time of it. When you blame the Welfare State, you get accused of being uncaring. When you call for stricter law enforcement and stiffer penalties, youre called harsh. When you fight for relaxations on minimum wage rules and environmental regulations in order to invite factories and other employers back in, youre called reactionary. But it is the only way.
We have seen a century of Welfare State policies, and we have seen the damage theyve done. Even in an era of economic growth, with business startups and hiring up, with companies moving back to America from overseas at last, with the stock market at record highs and employment at an amazing 157 and a quarter million even with all this the big cities have been the slowest to turn around, because they have the most to overcome. The bigger the welfare ghetto, the harder it is for the beneficial private economy to return to the city.
Eventually, after a century of erecting barriers to growth, barriers to employment, barriers to prosperity, those barriers have become almost insurmountable (Walls really DO work, after all).
The time has come to admit the truth. While Baltimore has gotten the brunt of it over the past week, its true of so many big cities. All of them from Baltimore to St Paul, from Chicago to Los Angeles need to work to free their cities of the destruction brought by welfare. Sanctuary status attracts undeserving welfare recipients; revoking sanctuary status will repel them. True crackdowns on gang crime will make the streets safer, and more welcoming to potential employers. Cutting out the corruption in obtaining business licenses will help the small businesses come back; pension reform and tax cuts will help businesses of all sizes return.
It really isnt all that complicated; just look at everything that has driven employers and prosperity out of our cities for the past hundred years, and stop doing it.
Unfortunately, as long as our mayors and city councils remain unchanged, the odds of saving these sad cities arent great.
We do have a template: on the national scale, as we watch the successes of the Trump Economy these past 2.5 years, we do know exactly what works.
We just need the leaders of our cities to cut out the politics of graft, Marxism and destruction, and open their eyes to the limitless potential of limited government.
Copyright 2019 John F. Di Leo
John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based international trade professional, writer and actor. A former county chairman of the Milwaukee County Republican Party, he has been a recovering politician now for over 22 years.
BTTT
HOORAY jfd1776! Thanks. I’ve had very similar experiences in Detroit.
PS - Bring disposable shoe covers, Typhus and Bubonic Plague disinfectant and a dust mask to cover the smell of bum shit piled up in front of trendy brewpubs in the Arts District.
This is the preferred democrat lifestyle- to point out FACTS is now racist.
“What are the causes of these problems, what are the solutions? Which politicians are more concerned with listing the problems, and which ones are focused on trying to work toward solutions?”
Why, when I read these questions, I was 100% sure that the elephant in the room was not going to get mentioned?
Free trade and offshoring killed heavy industry and most major cities like Baltimore lost their economic viability. All the other problems followed that original sin.
Re industrialize the USA and all the other social problems will slowly melt away. That will require protectionist import tariffs but the USA is too stupid to do that so thy keep blaming the victim of globalism.
“Free trade and offshoring killed heavy industry and most major cities like Baltimore lost their economic viability.”
Baltimore had employment and poverty problems even in the 1970’s, when most stuff was still made in the USA. My mother’s house, built in 1979, used USA manufactured goods without exception.
Blight was carefully minimized then by government efforts.
I suspect the real estate bust is responsible for most of the current blight.
Twenty-first Century ‘gangster” culture is probably responsible for the level of violence.
I found it startling when I recently saw where the democRAT governed State of Illinois has a debt burden of over $216.8 Billion; while the Republican governed next door neighbor Indiana carries a $1.78 Billion budget surplus.
Reindustrialization will only add a few million jobs.
Industry is highly automated nowadays in the USA.
Perhaps Baltimore should aim to meet federal government needs in software system development, etc.
Building component manufacture would be a good choice too.
Health care, via the Johns Hopkins Hospital system, is probably Baltimore’s biggest private sector source of employment.
Well, that statement is misleading...
Note that the graph does not include Obama's full term. And also note that Trump is on the path to continue increasing the debt, unless he does something significant about cutting costs in his second term. (The improvement in the economy is not near enough to reduce the debt.)
US Debt Accumulation by President (2011)
And yes, I've been for Trump since before he announced his candidacy. Just point out the facts.
There is also the factor that Baltimore is a port city.
With containerization, port cities were hard hit employment-wise. The need for people to load and unload ships decreased by around 98%.
Bethlehem Steel at Sparrows Point?
There is no escape from big city liberalism
They have the brain dead votes. Nothing will change that without serious disruption
Or getting through to enough democrats
The siren song of socialism will never end
What needs to be demonstrated to
children is that - happiness comes from sacrificing for others ; not expecting what others can do for you
No other person no amount of money no amount of things will ever make you happy in this world
Only to love ; and be loved - and to create , and make sacred, life on earth
Its all in our hands
Baltimore is not a “hellhole”.
It has significantly large outdated housing areas.
Pairs of narrow houses might be combined to form larger houses.
A neighbor of a vacant house might be allowed to buy the vacant house cheaply by paying some of the fines due on the vacant house and showing the ability to renovate the vacant house.
Baltimore’s large underutilzed population might do housing renovation work.
In Savannah, Georgia, many houses on a block get renovated at one time, changing a blighted block into an upscale block.
Brian, don’t be silly. All the statistics - poverty, crime, percentage of dangerous neighborhoods, etc. - confirm that Baltimore is a hellhole.
That’s not to say you’re not correct in the example you give - the idea of changing zoning and labor regs so that people can more easily renovate existing homes or tie them together. Sure.
But that would change only a very small percentage of the town... as long as employers and employees flee, there’s a limit to what you can do with the existing population.
And that’s why I focus on ending the welfare state, fast. As long as welfare works as it does, recipients read a post like yours, think about it for ten seconds, and say “nahh, it’s not worth it.”
Liberalism is the problem - driving employers and population out of the urban centers into the suburbs, driving manufacturing to foreign shores.
The 911 debt that Bush dealt with was being paid off until we elected a Democrat Congress. Of course once that happened, he allowed them to kick him around like a dead dog.
Reagan's debt paid for a peaceful end to the Cold War.
As for President Trump, this is one of my major disappointments with him. He clearly has not hesitatated calling out the Dems and the GOP on anything. I wish he call them out on the current overspending.
I wish he call them out on the current overspending.
The wall consumes what little political capital Trump has.
This sounds very much like what the Communists did in Russia and Eastern Europe.
You pretend to pay me and I pretend to work
All of which lead to high alcoholism and other related human deprivations
LOL. I don’t think 100 graphs could tell the whole story.
I agree with you on every point.
I don’t see how any politician can get elected by saying we need to tighten our belts and pay off the debt.
So we’ll keep kicking the can down the road until some emergency forces us to fix it.
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